Abstract

Inefficient parking practices have costs associated with them that extend well beyond lost profits and frustrated customers. This dissertation focuses on why parking providers appear hesitant in adopting Intelligent ParkingTechnology (IPT) that could help benefit all stakeholders. More specifically, this dissertation analyses the following question:

Intelligent Parking Technology (IPT) potentially offers drivers many benefits including faster parking times, more convenient payment options and safer parking lots. For parking providers, benefits of IPT implementation might include higher profits realized through increasedbusiness process efficiencies such as automated payment collection. Society could potentially benefit from IPT through primary effects such as reduced traffic congestion, greenhouse gas emissions and driver frustration levels. It may also benefit through secondary effects where, for example, a government uses profits realized through increased efficiencies and spends it on things that will benefit the community such as better roads and moregreen spaces.

We define Intelligent Parking Technology (IPT) as technologies that are managed by a parking service provider and add value by adapting themselves to whatever a parking situation may be. Intelligent Parking Technology (IPT) includes those technologies that offer a uniquefunctionality such as giving customers the ability to pay for parking using their cellular telephone (m-commerce), automatically directs them to empty parking spaces or automates payment via smart cards.

The parking providers investigated include businesses, schools, and governments. We consider technologies currently available to them as well market willingness to adopt them.

The Delphi technique is used and consists of interviewing independent content experts such as parking services managers within various organizations. We also interview one senior level manager working for a company that licenses or sells Intelligent Parking Technology (IPT).Questions formulated from these interviews are then brought forward and used in surveying drivers. Data is collected from the surveys and then analysed and interpreted through discussion with the independent content experts initially interviewed so that they may corroborate or disapprove thefindings. Their interpretations of the data are also considered in the study, as this research is primarily qualitative in nature.

The driver survey included questions that explored the perceived value drivers might get from different parking technologies currently available to parking providers. Findings from the driver surveys clearly show thatdrivers are more than willing to adopt Intelligent Parking Technology (IPT).

In every case, the majority of drivers indicated that they would get at least some value from the specific parking technologies presented. This varied from a low of 60.9 percent of respondents indicating they would get valuefrom a robotic parking system to a high of 94.7 percent indicating they would receive value from a system that would direct them to empty parking spaces.

Over 66 percent of drivers also stated that they would be willing to pay more for a parking space if Intelligent Parking Technology (IPT) added value for them.

The senior manager from the parking technology company was not at all surprised by the driver survey results. Parking providers, on the other hand, seemed somewhat surprised by the survey findings and the follow-up interviews where these findings were discussed seemed to initiate a state ofreflection for them.